State v. Cox

34 N.W.2d 616, 240 Iowa 248, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 433
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1948
DocketNo. 47315.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 34 N.W.2d 616 (State v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cox, 34 N.W.2d 616, 240 Iowa 248, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 433 (iowa 1948).

Opinion

Mulroney, J.

— Defendant’s appeal from his conviction of the crime of larceny of domestic animals questions the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. Defendant ivas about twenty-seven years old and was living with his parents on a farm near New Sharon in August and the first part of September- in 1947.

The indictment charged defendant with stealing six head of cattle, the property of one Madison Hull of Mahaska county. The record shows that Hull purchased eight head of red cattle from a sales barn in Grinnell about August 8, 1947. Millard Cox, defendant’s father, was occupying a farm near New Sharon which he had sold to Tracy Everhart, with possession to be delivered to the purchaser September 1. Hull made arrange- | ments with Millard Cox and Tracy Everhart for pasturing the cattle on the above farm and they were delivered to the pasture on this farm about August 12. Hull inspected the cattle on the farm from time to time and on the 17 or 18 of September he noticed six head were missing. Millard Cox did not actually [deliver possession of the farm- to Everhart until about the ¡eleventh day of September. The sheriff and a state agent inIvestigated the loss and learned that on September 9, 1947, defendant sold six head of red cattle to Wilson Brothers in Cedar ¡Rapids for $944.94. The defendant was arrested at the home ¡of his sister in Atlanta, Georgia. When returned to Iowa he *250 signed a statement to the effect that his consin, Homer Cox, had come to his parents’ home on the night of September 8 and asked him to go to Cedar Rapids in his truck and sell some cattle for him. The statement went on to say that Homer told him to sell the cattle in his own name and that he would pay defendant well, and that he accompanied Homer, sold the six head of cattle in his name, and Homer gave him $200 for his services. At the trial defendant testified the above statement was untrue. He testified his father told him to sell the cattle and he engaged Homer as trucker and, in accordance with his father’s instructions, he helped Homer load the six head of cattle and sold them in Cedar Rapids for $944.94 and then gave the purchase money, less $25 paid to Homer, to his father, retaining, however, $219 which his father owed him. He said that at the time he took the cattle from the farm and sold them it was his understanding that the cattle belonged to his father.

Defendant was corroborated by his father, Millard Cox, who said that he told his son to sell his cattle off of this farm which he was vacating and that the cattle his son sold were his cattle.

I. We think the verdict was not against the weight of the , evidence. There was ample evidence to show the cattle the defendant sold were-the cattle owned bj^ Madison Hull. The jury was not bound to accept the story of defendant and his father. Both had previously been convicted of a felony. At the time defendant sold the cattle he gave his right name but a fictitious address. He left the state shortly after he sold the cattle and wrote back to a girl in New Sharon and, in the course of the letter, told her “whatever you do don’t tell anybody where I am” and he gave her instructions to answer his letter by a sealed letter inside an envelope addressed to his sister in Atlanta. When apprehended he signed a statement to' the effect that he had sold the cattle at the request of Homer Cox, and later repudiated this statement. The father’s story that the cattle were his was told for the first time at the trial, although the father knew of the charge against his son and was present at the preliminary hearing when his son was brought back from Georgia, He said he did not say anything at that time about *251 the cattle being his because he was not asked. Moreover, the father’s testimony as to when and where he had purchased the cattle, which he said his son sold, was quite- vague.

Defendant’s testimony repudiating his earlier theory of defense as embodied in the written statement he gave the officers is rather evasive and uncertain. lie testified most of the written statement was not true but “there aré parts of it that is right.” Here is a portion of his cross-examination with reference to the statement:

“Q. Did you make that statement? A. I could have told them anything — I was not under oath. That was talking maybe. Q. You say you did make that statement? A. I could have told them I was Samson, it would have been the same. Q. You made that statement? A. Yes. Q. It was true when you made it? A. It was not. Q. You were lying? A. Yes, I was. Q. You are not lying now? A. How do you know?”

II, The court gave the usual stock instructions and defendant complains that nowhere did the court present his theory of defense, namely, that if the jury found defendant was ordered by his father-to haul and sell the cattle and if they found defendant at the time believed the cattle were the property of his father, then they should find defendant was not guilty of larceny of said cattle.

Under the record, such an instruction should have been given. The State answers that no reversible error resulted in the failure to so instruct because no such instruction was requested, citing State v. Dale, 225 Iowa. 1254, 282 N. W. 715, and State v. Christensen, 205 Iowa 849, 216 N. W. 710, and several other eases.- It is true that we have often said the defendant who fails to request an instruction on his theory of defense is in no position to complain when the court does not instruct on such theory. In State v. Wheeler, 216 Iowa 433, 435, 249 N. W. 162, we said:

“It was the duty of the court, without request therefor, to fairly present the issues to the jury in order that they might have a clear and intelligent conception of the questions before (hem for decision.”

*252 There was no issue as to the taking of the cattle. Defendant took them. He said he took them. He said at the time he took them and sold them it was his “honest understanding” and “honest belief” that those cattle belonged to his father. He is corroborated by his father. Clearly he would not be guilty of larceny if at the time he took the cattle he believed that they were his father’s cattle, even though he was mistaken in such belief. State v. Schmidt, 239 Iowa 440, 30 N. W. 2d 473. Nowhere in the instructions was the jury told that if defendant believed the cattle were his father’s he should be acquitted. As said in State v. O’Hagan, 38 Iowa 504, 507, “To omit to give instructions upon this essential part of the case and so clearly made by the testimony, was error * * See also State v. Brainard, 25 Iowa 572, 580; 23 C. J. S., Criminal Law, section 1324.

It can be said of this case as was said in State v. Brainard, supra:

“If the defendant had any defense, it was this, and in some way the attention of the jury should have been directed to it, and the law respecting it stated to them * * *. It may be urged against this position, that it was the duty of the defendant’s counsel to have asked instructions on this subject, and if he failed to do so, he must take the consequences * * *. It is made the duty of this court to decide ex-iminal appeals according to the very justice of the case as shown by the record, without regard to technical errors.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.W.2d 616, 240 Iowa 248, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cox-iowa-1948.